Posts Tagged ‘niche marketing’

Wirehouse Brokers/Captive Agents Wake Up Call

Monday, April 25th, 2011

The ultimate defense against discount stockbrokers, on-line insurance and the Internet.

It’s time for a wake up call or your business will be swallowed by entities with more money than you who know how to use technology to take your business.  If you manage money or sell investments, there are already many sophisticated tools on the Web that can replace your advice.    If you sell insurance, anyone can get term insurance on the web in about 10 minutes and they do not need you.

Your hands are especially tied working for a large firm because you cannot use the Internet as a powerful tool to fuel your business.  You cannot have a web site, you likely cannot have a blog, you cannot build a personal reputation.  You are a sitting duck.

Sorry if you are affronted, but I want to help you protect your business and that means facing the truth.

If you think, “Well I’ll just offer term insurance on the web too,” realize that there are thousands of agents on the web who already do this.  There’s no reason to come to your site as this product has been made into a commodity.  If you think, “I will offer stock advice on my site,” join the other thousands of sites that can do this better than you.  In the long run, the Internet is not your friend.

The solution to this is to make sure you are NOT doing the same thing as everyone else.  You can differentiate any commodity and carve out a protected niche.

This may require that you learn something new.  For example, I cannot find advice on the web about where to find high yielding, yet safe preferred stocks.  That’s a specialty. To become such an expert, means you need an education in that arena.  How many sites are called “Term Insurance for Physicians?”  That can be made into a specialty and requires that you really understand the needs of physicians and how they differ form others.

The public is getting smarter all the time.  Ten years ago you could exist as a financial planning generalist.  As people get smarter they will realize they can fill out some forms on the web and get the same financial plan you handed them.  As they get more sophisticated , so must you.  Financial advisors must be one step ahead of the prospect, or you’ve got nothing of value to offer.

Please do not ignore the threat of commoditization of financial planning.  It’s happening slowly.  Schwab and Fidelity are offering your clients planning services.  These efforts will expand.  Insurance companies are turning their captive agents into financial planners.   And as mentioned, web sites already provide financial planning to your clients.

The good news is that the process of the public learning how to be their own planner is a slow one.  There’s also a segment of the public, the affluent, that has more complex problems that they will always need a professional (which requires that you understand and have solutions for those problems).  Additionally, seniors have not adopted the web as quickly and remain a viable market for personal service and like the attention of a human.  Last, there are certain personality types (a ripe area for you to study) that will always be more responsive to getting assistance than doing it themselves.  Targeting these people is wise.

What should you do.

Pick a specialty.  Some arena of your work that fascinates you or you see as a lucrative growing area.  Become an expert.  You do this by studying everything you can find and learning from any experts that already exist.  You may need to subscribe to new publications and attend specific seminars or workshops.  It’s an investment of your time and money. (The key to success in any business in this century is being a self-teacher). You will also need a marketing system to communicate your expertise to the target market that value’s it.  The benefit to you will be a business that has staying power.

Some examples of specialization:

  • Specialist in preferred stock
  • Specialist in stocks of (name an industry)
  • Specialist in working with (name a profession or segment of the population)
  • Specialist in tax reduction
  • Stock options specialist
  • 401k specialist
  • Specialist in insuring sub-standard cases

Pick a niche and protect yourself. Read more on niche marketing at Brokerville.

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Three Requirements to be a Million-Dollar Producer

Monday, September 15th, 2008

Perhaps you’ve been in the business for a few years and you’re doing okay, but you can’t seem to find that magical formula that will make you a million-dollar producer? If you only had more clients, that would do it, right? However, time is a precious commodity; there is a limit to how many clients you can effectively serve. In truth, acquiring more clients isn’t as much the answer as getting the right clients in the door is.

This is the first of a series of three articles that will help you focus your practice so that you can reach the million-dollar sales level.

You Must Have Homogeneous Clients
The homogeneous mass market, which has dictated the offerings of U.S. producers since the dawn of the industrial revolution, is coming to an end. Think about what has happened to the automobile industry. Henry Ford sold his Model Ts in any color the customer wanted, as long as it was black. And the same holds true with the fast-food restaurants. Today, you can get it “your way.” Hardly the case a few years ago when all that was available was a one-way-suits-all burger.

The mass market is splintering into market niches and the niches are growing smaller. Therefore, the shotgun approach to reach those niches will not be as effective as they were in the past. You must breakaway from the heard and focus your marketing efforts on a narrower and more specialized group in order to become a million-dollar producer.

Tomorrow’s clients will be more demanding and vocal and will expect you to fulfill their requirements. So rather than trying to increase your number of clients, think about narrowly targeting your market to increase the quality of the products and services your offer to fewer clients.

Tapping into a specific niche can help you stand out from the crowd—differentiate yourself in ways that are important to your prospects and clients. And the most efficient way to do this is by working with groups who have similar “mind sets” so you can become the expert on solving their problems. Examples of niche markets include small business owners, early retirees from the same company, individuals who recently lost a spouse, and newly divorced women. Take a look at your current client base. Most reps say that 80% of their revenues come from 20% of their clients. What characteristics do your top 20% have? Do you know their preferences, goals, and lifestyles? What do they have in common? Is it their age, net worth, geographic area, or perhaps religious or ethnic background? And equally important, which group do you enjoy working with the most?

Do your homework. Identify common problems; create solutions. Become an expert on the sociology of this group, what motives them, and their inclination to plan for financial security. Find out what this group expects from a financial professional and how they want to receive your message.

One of the best ways to really get to know your clients is to interview them. Ask 20 of your clients who best represent the market you wish to target to meet with you. Take some of your better clients to lunch and ask them what they like and dislike about your products, your services, and the presentations you made to them. The answers will give you some ideas on how to market and sell to this niche. Then you can use the same profile early in a prospect relationship to find out if this is the type of person that you want as a client.

Have a list of 10 open-ended questions you really want answered to gain insight to the mind-set of this group. For a few hundred dollars, you’ll have marketing information that few other planners or even financial services firms have ever obtained.

Reorganize your marketing efforts, such as seminars and direct mail campaigns, around these common needs and carve yourself a homogeneous market. This will allow you to better monitor your results and make changes as needed. Don’t forget to ask for referrals; “do you have other friends who are like you that may be interested in my services?”

Niche marketing requires a thought process in that you cannot be all things to all people; don’t be afraid to turn away business that isn’t in your niche. Once you get into the mind-set of this group, you can better define your practice’s image and product offerings to meet their needs. The payoff will be that you will become better at the services you offer, you will realize more sales per client, and your practice will become more profitable.

This post provided by Javelin Marketing

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